The Political Management of Managed Care: Explaining Variations in State Health Maintenance Organization Regulations
Open Access
- 1 June 2007
- journal article
- Published by Duke University Press in Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
- Vol. 32 (3) , 457-495
- https://doi.org/10.1215/03616878-2007-011
Abstract
In the 1990s, strong incentives for managed care organizations to control costs, once regarded as a fortuitous confluence of interests, came to be seen as antithetical to consumers' interests in quality of care. In response to this change in political climate, many states have greatly increased their regulatory control of managed care organizations since the mid-1990s. This activity is surprising in an era when public policy on health care issues is usually described as frozen, gridlocked, and/or stalemated as a result of intense activity on the part of organized interests. We take advantage of the variation in state regulations of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) to discover why some governments are able to address policy problems that are often perceived as intractable in a political if not in a true policy sense. From the history of HMOs, the backlash against managed care, and state responses to that backlash, we first extract a number of hypotheses about state regulatory activity. We then test these hypotheses with data on regulatory adoptions by states during the late 1990s and the early 2000s. Last, we discuss the findings with special attention to the role of politics in health care.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Legislative Agendas and Interest AdvocacyAmerican Politics Research, 2005
- Drawing Lobbyists to Washington: Government Activity and the Demand for AdvocacyPolitical Research Quarterly, 2005
- Are PAC Contributions and Lobbying Linked? New Evidence from the 1995 Lobby Disclosure ActBusiness and Politics, 2002
- How the Health Care Revolution Fell ShortLaw and Contemporary Problems, 2002
- State Lobbying Regulations and Their Enforcement: Implications for the Diversity of Interest CommunitiesState and Local Government Review, 1998
- Interest Representation and Democratic GridlockLegislative Studies Quarterly, 1995
- Political-Economic Factors Influencing State Medicaid PolicyPolitical Research Quarterly, 1994
- The Tax Revolt: a Comparative State AnalysisThe Western Political Quarterly, 1983
- Toward a More General Theory of RegulationThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1976
- The Theory of Economic RegulationThe Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science, 1971